Conflicting Instructions at 2 different Law Office Websites

mikectm2

New Member
Jurisdiction
California
California I can not stress enough how important this is. That's why i've decided to create a post here about it.

Is a trust 1st revoked ..and then the assets are removed as this website below suggests

Guide to Revoking a Trust | How to Revoke a Revocable Living Trust – Keystone Law Group




Or are the assets removed BEFORE the Trust is Revoked ? As this website below says

How to Revoke a Trust





I'm pretty sure assets are removed before the trust is revoked. A family member of mine is getting confused by the

website of Keystone Law

I find it REAL FUNNY how the next thing that keystone law says at their website, after posting those incorrect steps, IS " and we have Probate attorneys ready to help you



On a seperate side note i had a local estate planning attorney tell me this week via text message " the pcor is actually not filed with the Recorder's Office at all. < THAT IS FLAT WRONG


Back to the main point, can someone please comment on the Keystone law website and the Steps for revoking a Trust
that they're giving. it is confusing a family member of mine
 
I can not stress enough how important this is.

And I cannot stress how important it is for your family member to retain an attorney, as opposed to relying on you to seek information from anonymous strangers at message boards and from blogs and generic attorney website posts. Considering we've told you this previously in response to your other posts at this site and the other site where you've posted about this, the existence of this post suggests you do not find the input from the folks who post here and there to be worthwhile, which makes your continued posting awfully ironic.
 
If you awoke tomorrow morning hemorrhaging blood via your nostrils and your rectum, which would you choose?

A: Ignore it, it'll stop eventually.
B: Call 911 and ask for paramedics to respond to your location.
C: Ask unknown internet denizens and hope for the best.
 

You posted a thread on Monday re this...On Tuesday you were advised to get an attorney.

Just consult with an attorney, okay?
 
The problem is that terms and conditions of the trust and the state law that applies to that trust (which might not be the state in which the trust creator lives) impact how much freedom the trustee has to distribute the assets while the trust is in effect. The nature of the assets in the trust matter, too. This is why you see information out there that seems to be conflicting. General statements on law firm's web site or blog on how to do something are based on certain assumptions that may not be specifically mentioned in the article and if your situation varies from those assumptions the process you need to do to accomplish your goal may end up being different.
 
Back
Top